The Rising by Bruce Springsteen

Album cover for The Rising - Bruce Springsteen

The Rising is the 12th studio album by American recording artist Bruce Springsteen, released in 2002 on Columbia Records. In addition to being Springsteen's first studio album in seven years, it was also his first with the E Street Band in 18 years. It is centered around Springsteen's reflections on the September 11, 2001 attacks. Upon its release, The Rising was a critical and commercial success, and hailed as the triumphant return for Springsteen. It debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200 chart, with first-week sales of over 520,000 copies. With this, Springsteen became the oldest person to achieve a first-week sales of over a half of a million copies in the United States[citation needed]. The album also garnered a Grammy Award for Best Rock Album in 2003; although nominated for the Album of the Year award as well, it was beaten by Norah Jones' debut album Come Away with Me. Title song "The Rising" was also a Grammy nominee and recipient. For the year 2002, The Rising was one of only two albums to receive Rolling Stone's highest rating – five stars – the other being Beck's Sea Change. The magazine also ranked the album #15 on its list of 100 Best Albums of the Decade. In 2012, it was rated #424 on the 500 Greatest Albums.

“Our band was built well over many years, for difficult times,” Bruce Springsteen once wrote about <i>The Rising</i>, the album he put together after the terrorist attacks on America that took place on 11 September 2001. The record’s emotional heart lies with “Into the Fire”, a folk-blues number inspired by the emergency workers who ascended the World Trade Center while everyone else was fleeing for their lives. He’d come back to that image in <i>The Rising</i>’s title track, which centres on the inner monologue of a firefighter ascending—both physically and divinely. Released in 2002, <i>The Rising</i> marked Springsteen’s first studio album with the E Street Band since 1988’s <i>Tunnel of Love</i>. They’d recently come together for 1999’s Reunion Tour, a two-year foray that grossed millions—and, more importantly, re-energised the musicians, preparing them for the challenge of making <i>The Rising</i>. Producer Brendan O’Brien (Pearl Jam, Rage Against the Machine) worked with Springsteen both sonically and lyrically, pushing him to write new material for the record. The result was one of Springsteen’s most critically and commercially successful albums in years. What Springsteen handles beautifully on <i>The Rising</i>—most notably on tracks like “Lonesome Day" and “You’re Missing”—is the distillation of national grief into the small everyday details of a life: the empty sky; a missing spouse; the quiet moments of strength that are required to get past tragedy. Other standout tracks include “Worlds Apart” and “Paradise”, which represent Springsteen’s perspective on the global impact of the tragedy. Meanwhile, both “Waitin’ on a Sunny Day” and “Mary’s Place” focus on finding the everyday joy and renewal of life once again. <i>The Rising</i> closes with “My City of Ruins”, a song originally written a year earlier about the economic and social decline of Springsteen’s adopted hometown, Asbury Park. But on <i>The Rising</i>, the song is transmuted into a universal hymn of hope and survival.